10 reasons for Detroit’s historic failures

The city of Detroit declared Chapter 9 bankruptcy on Thursday, making it the largest city in American history to go through the municipal bankruptcy process.

On Friday, a judge ruled that filing unconstitutional, but as the city sorts out its next move, here are 10 facts about the causes of Detroit’s financial mess and 10 photos that reflect just how badly the city is doing these days.

NOT SO GRANDE: The main dance floor at The Grande Ballroom in downtown Detroit has seen better days. [Wikimedia Commons]

That’s a lot more than some of the other high-profile municipal bankruptcy cases in recent years. When Central Falls, R.I., declared bankruptcy in 2011, it had only about $80 million in debt. Jefferson County, Ala., had about $4 billion in debt when it declared Chapter 9 bankruptcy that same year.

NO MORE TRAINS: The Michigan Central Train Station used to be a buzz of activity, with people pouring into the city. Today, it’s a darkened, empty shell. [Wikimedia Commons]

4. A lot of that debt is the result of public pensions.

According to Moody’s, Detroit has about $3 billion in unfunded pension liabilities. But Orr says those numbers are understated. And it didn’t take long for the pension funds to sue the city in an attempt to stop the bankruptcy proceedings.

POPULATION LOSSES: With 60 percent of the city’s 1950 population now gone, there are plenty of abandoned homes in Detroit, like this stately place on Edmund Street. [Wikimedia Commons]

5. Why is the city buried in pension costs? Because it has too many public workers.

The heads of the pension funds said the trip was for work, not play. But Orr’s spokesman said they shouldn’t have gone, anyway.

“It especially doesn’t look good when you have city employees, police, firefighters having taken pay cuts,” said Bill Nowling, spokesman for Orr. “Middle-class, blue-collar workers, their dream vacation when they retire may be a two-week trip to Hawaii — they don’t associate Hawaii with a place you go to work.”

THE MORE YOU CHEATED, THE BIGGER REWARD YOU GOT: Detroit has seen its fair share of morally bankrupt leaders. The abandoned Woodward Avenue Presbyterian Church gives witness. [Wikimedia Commons]

7. But they are hardly the only corrupt public employees in town.

Former mayor Kwame Kilpatrick, a Democrat, was convicted in March on 24 federal felony offenses, including mail fraud, wire fraud, tax evasion, racketeering and extortion. Prosecutors said he doled out jobs to friends and family, wasted city tax dollars on fraudulent contracts and pocketed more than $1 million in illegal kickbacks.

He previously had pleaded guilty to charges of obstruction of justice in a criminal investigation in 2008.

IN NEED OF A REVIVAL: Detroit’s Metropolitan Building was built in the Gothic revival style of 1925. It was closed in 1977 and remains shuttered. [Wikimedia Commons]

8. Basic city services are non-existent

In his letter authorizing the city to enter Chapter 9 bankruptcy, Michigan Gov. Rick Snyder, a Republican, pointed to some amazing statistics.

WHO WANTS THIS HOUSE: Another of the empty, abandoned and blighted properties that dot the once-proud city of Detroit. [Shutterstock]

9. Crime is up and the police have no way to respond.

While much of the city’s financial trouble is due to the public pension it must pay to retired teachers, city employees, cops and firefighters, that leaves little money on the table to pay actual cops to keep actual people safe in Detroit. The average response time for an emergency call was 58 minutes, according to Snyder’s letter, compared to a national average of 11 minutes. And only 8.7 percent of crimes in the city are solved, compared to a statewide average of 30.5 percent in Michigan.

CAN IT BOUNCE BACK? Gov. Rick Snyder says bankruptcy is a low point, but a turning point, for the city. [Shutterstock]

10. There are 78,000 abandoned buildings in Detroit.

This is a result of all of the above. Fewer people, fewer jobs, less economic activity and tons of crime have created a city-sized collection of abandoned buildings. We only had room for a few photographs here, but Snyder says there are 78,000 such structures in Detroit.

Snyder wrote this Thursday’s decision was a low point in the city’s long history of decline.

“I think it will also be a foundation of the city’s future,” he said. “With this decision, we begin to provide a foundation to rebuild and grow Detroit.”

They’ve got a long way to go.

Eric Boehm is a reporter for Watchdog.org . Contact him at [email protected] Follow him on Twitter @EricBoehm87